It creates the feeling that out of the rubble, life struggles to rise from the decay.It further adds to the blight of the abandoned structure... the hopelessness of the area.
Only after someone starts painting on that new blank white canvas.Whitewashing is a new beginning... a symbol of starting anew! Art!
It has so far.I don't think that would stop them...
Actually, it would be city council, and if it happens, the deal is you paint it over yourself and then deduct the cost of the paint (but not the labour) from your municipal taxes, or you let the city do it, which most victims would avoid because the thought of city workers tromping on bushes and flower-beds all around your house is creepier than the graphiti.but I bet the neighbors would want you to... lets say... whitewash their art.
Not all the walls. But I do have a basement concrete wall along the wide length of the house that I applied a sealant to and which I've been painting murals etc. on for years... it's been completely done over about three times now.What about inside your house? All the walls.
In any case, if you really hate graphiti - presumably because you just can't stand the idea that some kids would find a way to turn urban decay into art - then use lye for the whitewash, so it disolves the material that the graphiti is being painted on.
That way you get rid of ugly urban decay by disolving it away instead of just spray-painting it over.